Single plane measurements performed at close distance should always be treated with some caution. What matters most in typical domestic listening environments is a speaker's power response, or what Harmon refers to as "Sound Power". That said, it's apparent that B&W deliberately engineer a dip in the power response in the 2-3kHz region, although it's done to a lesser extent in the 800 series. Some people refer to this as their 'house sound' but my guess is that the slight departure from flat is in part a means of compensating for the non linearity of the human ear, given that most people will be listening at levels 10-20dB below 'live'. Whether this is good, bad, right or wrong etc is a matter of opinion of course.
Fwiw, the decision by B&W to use simpler crossovers was based on improved transient response, and the subjective benefits were deemed to outweigh the subjective downside of a less even lateral and vertical polar response.